Tom Robinson Loves Mary Lynne:
Sector 27 in New York
When the Tom Robinson Band dissolved in 1979--broken by its own
premature success and conceptual uncertainty--and taped radio
shows. Two months later, he began organizing a new group with
ex-Troggs bassist Jo Burt. The musical plan was sparse, keyboardless,
and experimental, and the conceptual note more "personal," less
"political." Musically, TRB had been direct, with flat, loud vocals,
athletic, even-handed rhythms, and music-hall flourishes. Politically,
it had left-liberal concerns: police brutality, right-wing
machination, oppression of gays, solidarity with women, like that. The
cutting edge was that Robinson himself, a blond schoolboy type,
earnest as the day, was openly gay.
Robinson and Burt placed ads and held mass auditions for lead
guitarist and drummer, found young Stevie B and Derek "The Menace"
Quinton, lifted the name "Sector 27" (for its "neutrality") from an
Allen Ginsberg poem, and within seven months the band had toured
England and America, cut an album, and bought the tape from a dubious
EMI: Where were the cars and football that pleased the crowd, the
politics that pleased the critics? I saw Sector's summer debut at the
Bottom Line-crisp and tense, with post-punk visuals-thought, "Good
idea, but Tom's too well-bred to bring it off," and forgot the whole
thing until I heard Sector 27 (on I.R.S.) and realized I remembered
close to every song. That was the other thing about Robinson: he could
write like that. The well-bred problem came out mostly at Robinson's
live shows where (in America, anyhow) his straight-arrow sincerity and
compulsion to please seemed so inconsistent with the genuine rage of
his material that I first squirmed and finally lost interest, just as
I often have in the protest of folksingers - because tone alters
credibility and phony protest is part of the problem, not part of the
solution. It was because of the tone that at first I heard Sector 27
as more political than its predecessors. The music (mostly co-written
with Burt and/or Stevie), with its spaces, guitar stings, and
purposeful designs, broke down Robinson's gung-ho,
hail-fellow-well-met pose and emphasized the dryness, angularity, and
bite that had always been present in his voice, language, and
melodies. The lyrics are more allusively conceived, typically built on
alternating fragment blocks open to multiple interpretations: "I never
expected a pie in the sky/but anything's better than a kick in the
eye," b/w "Am I ready? I'm not ready!" (for sex/death/war). They have
obscure, sometimes contradictory subjects, and regularly refer,
however obliquely, to gay sex.
"From a gay point of view, I feel much happier with Sector 27,"
Robinson told me last weekend, in between headlining at Irving Plaza
and opening for the Police at the Garden. "In TRB it was like
something that was just tacked on." And I find the band as well as the
material more suitable to a gay artistic statement. (I mean
artistic:--Who the other musicians sleep with is their own business.)
At the very least, it's punker, and punk is so boy-conscious. The
clean, sharp attractiveness of the men and music of Sector 27 is much
more in the style of gay male culture than the scruffy
rough-and-tumble of TRB.
And I do mean the music, too, where the specializing of the very young
men who are half the band is fostered, honored, and needed, with the
special gender sympathy gay men share more commonly with women than
with straight men. Burt's tom-tom basslines shade harmonics and build
a brooding suspense, but it's Stevie B's post-Giorgio-Moroder
skitters, squawks, swoops, and screes that save Robinson from his own
foursquareness. And it's my guess that Derek Quinton--that great
prize, a laughing drummer--could improve some tempos that are just
begging to be pushed headlong.
At both New York gigs, while Stevie preened, Quinton laughed, and
Burt--whose wonderful face carried better at the plaza--held steady,
Robinson seemed surprisingly relaxed. While he was always friendly, he
didn't try so hard to be ingratiating--though he should have dared to
stop for a tune-up at the Garden. Robinson has a different physical
presence than last time around, so much that a gay man I introduced
Robinson to at a party was disappointed: "I heard he was gorgeous."
I had a different take. I liked seeing this gay hero so puffy, tired
and ill-at-ease--it was as if he was letting us see a hurtful
truth. There has always been a disorienting tension in Robinson's work
between his courage and charm and a terror of displeasing that can
make him clumsy or pat--or straight. That tension is put to artistic
use in Sector 27, where righteous fear (of sex/death/violence) appears
as the cornerstone of future courage. This is why I think that the
album's center is "Mary Lynne." Robinson's memory of being beaten and
called a girl's name by queerbashers--a child's defeat, but the first
day in the life of a heroic man. As I've said, Robinson's fearfulness
has put me off too. But though his new musical strength is very much a
function of new command, command alone never makes good art, or
politics either: it's just discipline. Sector 27 is art and
politics--its force doesn't grow out of its muscle. It grows out of an
"overweight, underhand, out-of-bounds" boy who was once told, for an
awful hour, that he wasn't a man.
Village Voice, Jan. 1981
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